The far-right Vox party — which takes a hardline on immigration and gender rights — won 24 out of a total 350 seats, after bursting onto Spain's political scene last year.In an election with 75.8% turnout, the governing PSOE took 123 seats, and will now seek the support of other parties to form a government, having fallen short of an overall majority.Spanish politics is fragmenting further, as PSOE's traditional rivals, the conservative People's Party (PP) won 66 seats, down from 137 in 2016's election.For years Spain was governed by the PP or PSOE, but Podemos, Ciudadanos and Vox have emerged in recent years, shaking up the two-party established order.A total of 176 seats is required to control parliament, and neither the leftist nor the right-leaning bloc won the required amount. Center-right Ciudadanos won 57 seats while left-wing Unidas Podemos won 35.With more than 98% of the vote counted the PSOE was declared winner by Spanish government spokeswoman Isabel Celaá Diéguez.Incumbent PSOE Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez addressed supporters outside the party headquarters in Madrid after the result was confirmed."After 11 years a socialist party has won the general election in Spain. And so the future beats the past," he said as the PSOE gained 38 seats more than in 2016."We have sent a message to Europe and to the world, that we can win over authoritarianism."

Sanchez to negotiate a deal
Spain is the only country in western Europe that has never been governed by a coalition government, though recent years have seen minority governments shored up by parliamentary alliances.A new government could include the Basque Nationalist Party, known as PNV, or the Catalan separatists that forced the elections in the first place after refusing to support Sanchez's 2019 budget in February.Analyst Jose Torreblanca of the European Council on Foreign Relations told CNN the PSOE and Ciudadanos are the winners of the election, while the PP suffered a "complete defeat" as a "divided right wing committed suicide."Albert Rivera, leader of Ciudadanos, said "the bad news today is that Sanchez will govern with Podemos and the separatists … but there is a project with a future in Ciudadanos."Rivera promised his followers that the party will govern soon."Ciudadanos has risen as the hope and the future of Spain," he added, after the party won 25 more seats than in 2016.PP leader Pablo Casado congratulated Sanchez for his victory and said he hoped his rival "would be able to govern without the support of the Catalan separatists."Sanchez could agree a deal with Podemos or Ciudadanos, according to Torreblanca.Pablo Iglesias, leader of Unidas PodemosRead More – Source

The far-right Vox party — which takes a hardline on immigration and gender rights — won 24 out of a total 350 seats, after bursting onto Spain's political scene last year.In an election with 75.8% turnout, the governing PSOE took 123 seats, and will now seek the support of other parties to form a government, having fallen short of an overall majority.Spanish politics is fragmenting further, as PSOE's traditional rivals, the conservative People's Party (PP) won 66 seats, down from 137 in 2016's election.For years Spain was governed by the PP or PSOE, but Podemos, Ciudadanos and Vox have emerged in recent years, shaking up the two-party established order.A total of 176 seats is required to control parliament, and neither the leftist nor the right-leaning bloc won the required amount. Center-right Ciudadanos won 57 seats while left-wing Unidas Podemos won 35.With more than 98% of the vote counted the PSOE was declared winner by Spanish government spokeswoman Isabel Celaá Diéguez.Incumbent PSOE Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez addressed supporters outside the party headquarters in Madrid after the result was confirmed."After 11 years a socialist party has won the general election in Spain. And so the future beats the past," he said as the PSOE gained 38 seats more than in 2016."We have sent a message to Europe and to the world, that we can win over authoritarianism."

Sanchez to negotiate a deal
Spain is the only country in western Europe that has never been governed by a coalition government, though recent years have seen minority governments shored up by parliamentary alliances.A new government could include the Basque Nationalist Party, known as PNV, or the Catalan separatists that forced the elections in the first place after refusing to support Sanchez's 2019 budget in February.Analyst Jose Torreblanca of the European Council on Foreign Relations told CNN the PSOE and Ciudadanos are the winners of the election, while the PP suffered a "complete defeat" as a "divided right wing committed suicide."Albert Rivera, leader of Ciudadanos, said "the bad news today is that Sanchez will govern with Podemos and the separatists … but there is a project with a future in Ciudadanos."Rivera promised his followers that the party will govern soon."Ciudadanos has risen as the hope and the future of Spain," he added, after the party won 25 more seats than in 2016.PP leader Pablo Casado congratulated Sanchez for his victory and said he hoped his rival "would be able to govern without the support of the Catalan separatists."Sanchez could agree a deal with Podemos or Ciudadanos, according to Torreblanca.Pablo Iglesias, leader of Unidas PodemosRead More – Source

"Individuals permanently residing in certain areas of Ukraine's Donetsk and Lugansk regions have the right to apply for Russian citizenship under a simplified procedure," a decree reads, according to Russia's state-run TASS news agency.Outgoing Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko called the move "unprecedented interference … in the internal affairs of an independent state." He said it was a "brutal violation of sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence of Ukraine and a complete trampling upon its obligations in the framework of the Minsk agreements."Speaking to reporters Thursday in the Russian city of Vladivostok after a summit meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Putin downplayed criticism of the move. "We are and I am personally far from provoking someone," the Russian President said. "The issue of passports is purely humanitarian."In addition to supporting separatists in eastern Ukraine, Russia annexed the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea in 2014. Efforts to broker a lasting peace in Ukraine have faltered. The Minsk agreements signed in 2014 and 2015 called for a ceasefire and withdrawal of heavy weapons but have repeatedly been breached.The proxy war has claimed around 13,000 lives in the country's east, where the majority of the ethnic minority Russian population lives.

US and UK condemnation
The US State Department on Wednesday condemned Putin's decision to fast-track Russian citizenship applications."Russia, through this highly provocative action, is intensifying its assault on Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity," the department said in a statement.Kurt Volker, the US special representative for Ukraine negotiations, was critical as well. "Russia's recent decision to issue passports is highly provocative and is straight from its 'occupation playbook' and undermines efforts to implement Minsk and restore Donbas to Ukrainian control," Volker said on Twitter.Read More – Source

"Individuals permanently residing in certain areas of Ukraine's Donetsk and Lugansk regions have the right to apply for Russian citizenship under a simplified procedure," a decree reads, according to Russia's state-run TASS news agency.Outgoing Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko called the move "unprecedented interference … in the internal affairs of an independent state." He said it was a "brutal violation of sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence of Ukraine and a complete trampling upon its obligations in the framework of the Minsk agreements."Speaking to reporters Thursday in the Russian city of Vladivostok after a summit meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Putin downplayed criticism of the move. "We are and I am personally far from provoking someone," the Russian President said. "The issue of passports is purely humanitarian."In addition to supporting separatists in eastern Ukraine, Russia annexed the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea in 2014. Efforts to broker a lasting peace in Ukraine have faltered. The Minsk agreements signed in 2014 and 2015 called for a ceasefire and withdrawal of heavy weapons but have repeatedly been breached.The proxy war has claimed around 13,000 lives in the country's east, where the majority of the ethnic minority Russian population lives.

US and UK condemnation
The US State Department on Wednesday condemned Putin's decision to fast-track Russian citizenship applications."Russia, through this highly provocative action, is intensifying its assault on Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity," the department said in a statement.Kurt Volker, the US special representative for Ukraine negotiations, was critical as well. "Russia's recent decision to issue passports is highly provocative and is straight from its 'occupation playbook' and undermines efforts to implement Minsk and restore Donbas to Ukrainian control," Volker said on Twitter.Read More – Source

Christian Schilcher, a member of the anti-immigration Freedom Party (FPÖ) that forms half of the country's ruling alliance, had published the poem in the Easter edition of his party's regional newspaper.It used xenophobic imagery to suggest that migrants should assimilate or "quickly hurry away" from their adopted countries, and was written over a drawing of a rat wearing a long black beard and hat.One line reads: "if you mix two cultures … it's as if you destroy them.""Just as we live down here, so must other rats, who as guests or migrants … share with us the way of life, or … quickly hurry away," the poem also says. Its title roughly translates to "The City Rat (Rodent from the Sewer)."Schilcher served as the deputy mayor of the small town of Braunau am Inn before his resignation was announced on Tuesday, reported by Austrian news agency APA.He had initially defended the message of the poem, claiming in an interview with regional newspaper Oberösterreichische Nachrichten that he had not considered the historical connotations of the comparison between humans and rats.Comparing Jewish people to rodents was a tactic frequently used in Nazi German propaganda under Adolf Hitler, who was born in Braunau am Inn.Chancellor Kurz — who has previously come under pressure to denounce the rhetoric and actions of FPÖ politicians — welcomed Schilcher's resignation, after initially condemning the poem."The resignation of the vice mayor #Braunau of was the only logical consequence of this vile and racist poem," he wrote on Twitter, calling the move "necessary and correct."Kurz has attempted to curb criticism over his ties with the far right party, as he prepares to contest next month's European elections. The FPÖ has been in government with Kurz's Austrian People's Party since the country's 2017 election, in which both parties took a hard line against immigration."The choice of words is disgusting, shows contempt for human beings and is deeply racist," he told Austrian news agency APA after the poem had first been discovered."The Freedom Party in Upper Austria must distance themselves from this immediately and unequivocally and issue a clarification," he added.Read More – Source

Ukrainians threw their overwhelming support behind comedian, actor and businessman Volodymyr Zelensky in Sunday's presidential election, according to exit polls, choosing a political novice over five more years of Petro Poroshenko. The 41-year-old political newcomer won 73.2% of the vote while incumbent Poroshenko won 25.3%, according to an exit poll from Ukraine's state broadcaster Ukrinform. It was the second round of elections.Zelensky's rise to power is a testament to voters' deep-rooted disappointment in the governing class, disgust over rampant corruption, and a flagging economy. Prior to his bid for the presidency, Zelensky was best known for his role in the Ukrainian comedy series, "Servant of the People," where he played a destitute schoolteacher who unexpectedly becomes president of Ukraine after becoming famous for an anti-corruption rant that went viral on social media. In real life, his entertainment empire is estimated to be worth tens of millions. Art mirrored reality when Zelensky used that same platform to announce his bid for the presidency. On New Year's Eve, he addressed the nation on the 1+1 channel, which broadcasts his show and is the country's second most popular TV station. Initially, support for Zelensky was largely seen as a protest vote, and his popularity grew as faith in Poroshenko floundered. Poroshenko, who came to power in the aftermath of the 2013 pro-Western Maidan protests, ran on a militant patriotic platform, but it appears to have struck the wrong chord with a population exhausted from a 5-year proxy war with Russia.

Inherited problems
Since Russia's annexation of the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea in 2014, Ukrainian troops have been battling in the eastern Donbas region against Russian-backed separatists, who have received military support from Moscow. According to United Nations estimates, the conflict has claimed almost 13,000 lives, with at least 3,321 civilian deaths.In November, tensions with Moscow reached fever pitch after Russia seized three Ukrainian navy ships and detained 24 sailors in the Kerch Strait, a strategic waterway. Poroshenko's government responded by imposing martial law and warning of impending Russian invasion.Though Zelensky will certainly inherit those problems, it's not clear how he will manage them. Zelensky ran on a fairly nebulous platform, offering little in the way of concrete policies. He also largely avoided having to express his views publicly, dodging big interviews, holding few press conferences and famously standing up Poroshenko at the first scheduled debate. Speaking on the 1+1 show, "The Right to Power" earlier this week, Zelensky said it was his campaign's strategy to not go on talk shows where "people from the old government sit and quarrel, do only PR and no real deals." "I wasn't hiding from anyone," he said, adding an apology to journalists who might have been offended by his lack of attention to the press.Although Zelensky never provided any clear policy goals, what did emerge from his campaign platform was his attention to starting fresh and a vow to fight against corruption and oligarchy.

Life imitating art
And while his television series is a fictional comedy, the subjects explored in the show may offer clues to how he plans to lead — or at least to what Ukrainians might expect of him.In the show, the intersection between crime and politics is a persistent theme, and Zelensky ran on a promise to get rid of systemic corruption.His character also primarily speaks Russian, along with many other cast members. Thirty percent of Ukraine speaks Russian, according to government statistics, and language is a controversial subject used by all sides to score political points. Read More – Source

(CNN) — Straddling the picturesque Danube, Budapest provides the perfect backdrop for a festival and this city definitely knows how to put on a show.Barely a month goes by when the Hungarian capital isn't playing host to some sort of event celebrating food and drink, music, dance or the arts.

For those keen to go and join the party, we've rounded up some of the most entertaining festivities happening in Budapest throughout the year.

Each year, Budapest jumps the gun on summer over a weekend in May for the Rosalia Festival.

Created by the organizers of September's wine festival, it's Hungary's only event dedicated to celebrating rosé wine, as well as champagne and sparkling wines.

Taking place over three days, it features a Rosé Garden, tastings, jazz concerts, Hungarian food stalls and special events for children.

Dates: May 31 to June 2, 2019

Sziget Festival

One of the biggest music festivals in Europe — Sziget Festival takes place every August.

Attila Kisbenedek/AFP/Getty Images

For more than 25 years, the week-long Sziget Festival has been taking over the Danube river island of Óbudai-sziget every August, showcasing more than 1,000 performers and drawing tens of thousands of people from all over the world.

Revelers soak up the lively ambience as dance artists put on theatrical performances on the site and everyone goes for a dip in the Danube along the sandy beach.

Dates: Aug 1 to 13, 2019

Budapest Summer Festival

Held throughout June, July and August, the Budapest Summer Festival brings some of the world's top classical musicians and ballet dancers to Margaret Island, located in the heart of Budapest.

There's a varied program of opera, ballet and classical music — with a bit of jazz and pop thrown in for good measure — most of which takes place in the enchanting setting of the Margaret Island Open-Air Stage.

Look out for the performances held in the open-air stage set up in the shadow of Margaret Island's historic water tower.

(CNN) — Straddling the picturesque Danube, Budapest provides the perfect backdrop for a festival and this city definitely knows how to put on a show.Barely a month goes by when the Hungarian capital isn't playing host to some sort of event celebrating food and drink, music, dance or the arts.

For those keen to go and join the party, we've rounded up some of the most entertaining festivities happening in Budapest throughout the year.

Each year, Budapest jumps the gun on summer over a weekend in May for the Rosalia Festival.

Created by the organizers of September's wine festival, it's Hungary's only event dedicated to celebrating rosé wine, as well as champagne and sparkling wines.

Taking place over three days, it features a Rosé Garden, tastings, jazz concerts, Hungarian food stalls and special events for children.

Dates: May 31 to June 2, 2019

Sziget Festival

One of the biggest music festivals in Europe — Sziget Festival takes place every August.

Attila Kisbenedek/AFP/Getty Images

For more than 25 years, the week-long Sziget Festival has been taking over the Danube river island of Óbudai-sziget every August, showcasing more than 1,000 performers and drawing tens of thousands of people from all over the world.

Revelers soak up the lively ambience as dance artists put on theatrical performances on the site and everyone goes for a dip in the Danube along the sandy beach.

Dates: Aug 1 to 13, 2019

Budapest Summer Festival

Held throughout June, July and August, the Budapest Summer Festival brings some of the world's top classical musicians and ballet dancers to Margaret Island, located in the heart of Budapest.

There's a varied program of opera, ballet and classical music — with a bit of jazz and pop thrown in for good measure — most of which takes place in the enchanting setting of the Margaret Island Open-Air Stage.

Look out for the performances held in the open-air stage set up in the shadow of Margaret Island's historic water tower.

Most of the casualties were German, Carmo Silva, a press officer for the Regional Health Department told CNN. In total, 56 people were on board the bus when it crashed, she said.Claudia Veloso, a spokeswoman for Portugal's Interior Minister, confirmed that 28 people had died."The German Embassy in Lisbon is talking to local authorities and there possibly are German fatalities, but we cannot confirm at this moment," a German Foreign Ministry spokesperson told CNN. According to Silva, the bus was going down a steep road, when it lost control and went down a cliff. The cause of the crash was not yet clear, she said.Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa said in a tweet that he had sent condolencesRead More – Source